J. Toby Reiner

Michael Walzer


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a hostile regime, but rather against an entire people. This made the government of South Vietnam illegitimate, which meant that the US intervention had to be understood as furthering its own geopolitical goals, not those of Vietnam (Walzer 2015a: 98–9). In short, the US did not “respect the character and dimensions of the Vietnamese civil war” (Walzer 2015a: 100). The US cause as a whole was akin to those military leaders who, faced with local intransigence to American goals, believed that, to save a particular village, they would have to destroy it. Walzer holds that the American war could be won only if it obliterated, rather than restoring, Vietnamese society, which is why US officers often felt forced to target entire villages (see Walzer 2015a: 309–16, on the My Lai massacre).

      At the heart of Walzer’s opposition to American involvement in Vietnam, then, is the claim that the Vietnamese people must determine for themselves their system of government. This belief, rooted in Walzer’s version of social democracy, which insists that each community must govern itself by its own standards, was to become a central plank of his just-war theory, most notably in the claim that almost all just wars are fought in defense of national sovereignty. It recurs throughout Walzer’s work in the claim that communities need a protected space for their common life.

      Secular thought on war in the 1960s was dominated by realist theories of international relations. Realism holds that moral judgments about war are meaningless. We might not like certain military campaigns, but that is a question of taste equivalent to dislike of foods or colors. As the saying goes, all’s fair in love and war. The realist argument asserts that states are motivated only by considerations of national interest, that they lack the freedom to make moral choices, and that there is no fixed international morality with reference to which they might make choices (see Orend 2000: 62–3). Added to the influence of realism was the dominance of utilitarian moral thinking. Utilitarianism judges morality by considering consequences, and is skeptical of the sort of absolute prohibition invoked by Christian just-war theory. Before he can advance a theory of just war, Walzer has to refute realism by establishing that judgments of justice in war are meaningful. By basing his theory on defense of human rights to life and liberty, Walzer provides a secular anchor for a non-Christian audience, while he attempts to balance reliance on the deontological notion of rights with some elements of utilitarianism, taking just-war principles to be binding in almost all cases (see his doctrine of “supreme emergency,” Walzer 2015a: 251–68, discussed in Chapter 2).